Lamentations 1

Lamentations 1New American Bible (Revised Edition) (NABRE)

Chapter 1

1 How solitary sits the city,once filled with people.She who was great among the nationsis now like a widow.Once a princess among the provinces,now a toiling slave.

2 She weeps incessantly in the night,her cheeks damp with tears.She has no one to comfort herfrom all her lovers;[b]Her friends have all betrayed her,and become her enemies.

3 Judah has gone into exile,after oppression and harsh labor;She dwells among the nations,yet finds no rest:All her pursuers overtake herin the narrow straits.

4 The roads to Zion mourn,empty of pilgrims to her feasts.All her gateways are desolate,her priests groan,Her young women grieve;her lot is bitter.

5 Her foes have come out on top,her enemies are secure;Because the Lord has afflicted herfor her many rebellions.Her children have gone away,captive before the foe.

6 From daughter Zion has goneall her glory:Her princes have become like ramsthat find no pasture.They have gone off exhaustedbefore their pursuers.

7 Jerusalem remembersin days of wretched homelessness,All the precious things she once hadin days gone by.But when her people fell into the hands of the foe,and she had no help,Her foes looked on and laughedat her collapse.

8 Jerusalem has sinned grievously,therefore she has become a mockery;Those who honored her now demean her,for they saw her nakedness;She herself groans out loud,and turns away.

9 Her uncleanness is on her skirt;she has no thought of her future.Her downfall is astonishing,with no one to comfort her.“Look, O Lord, at my misery;how the enemy triumphs!”[c]

10 The foe stretched out his handsto all her precious things;She has seen the nationsenter her sanctuary,Those you forbade to comeinto your assembly.

11 All her people groan,searching for bread;They give their precious things for food,to retain the breath of life.“Look, O Lord, and pay attentionto how I have been demeaned!

12 Come, all who pass by the way,pay attention and see:Is there any pain like my pain,which has been ruthlessly inflicted upon me,With which the Lord has tormented meon the day of his blazing wrath?

13 From on high he hurled fire downinto my very bones;He spread out a net for my feet,and turned me back.He has left me desolate,in misery all day long.

14 The yoke of my rebellions is bound together,fastened by his hand.His yoke is upon my neck;he has made my strength fail.The Lord has delivered me into the gripof those I cannot resist.

16 For these things I weep—My eyes! My eyes!They stream with tears!How far from me is anyone to comfort,anyone to restore my life.My children are desolate;the enemy has prevailed.”

17 Zion stretches out her hands,with no one to comfort her;The Lord has ordered against Jacobhis foes all around;Jerusalem has become in their midsta thing unclean.

18 “The Lord is in the right;I had defied his command.Listen, all you peoples,and see my pain:My young women and young menhave gone into captivity.

19 I cried out to my lovers,but they failed me.My priests and my eldersperished in the city;How desperately they searched for food,to save their lives!

20 Look, O Lord, at the anguish I suffer!My stomach churns,And my heart recoils within me:How bitter I am!Outside the sword bereaves—indoors, there is death.

21 Hear how I am groaning;there is no one to comfort me.All my enemies hear of my misery and rejoiceover what you have done.Bring on the day you proclaimed,and let them become like me!

22 Let all their evil come before youand deal with themAs you have so ruthlessly dealt with mefor all my rebellions.My groans are many,my heart is sick.”

Footnotes:

1:1–22In this poem the poet first takes on the persona of an observer describing Jerusalem’s abject state after the destruction wrought by the Babylonian army (vv. 1–11a); but the detached tone gives way to a more impassioned appeal when the city itself—personified as the grieving widow and mother Zion—abruptly intrudes upon this description (vv. 9c, 11c–16, 18–22) to demand that God look squarely at her misery.

1:2Lovers: language of love was typically used to describe the relationship between treaty partners, thus here it connotes Judah’s allies (see v. 19).

1:9Zion breaks in on the poet’s description in v. 9c, albeit briefly, to demand that the Lord face squarely her misery. She takes up the lament in a more sustained fashion in v. 11c.

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